º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Huge scale of Midas debts revealed following construction firm's collapse

More than 1,700 creditors have made claims but administrators admit they unlikely to be paid

Midas was headquartered in Exeter

The collapse of South West construction giant Midas means almost 2,000 other businesses in its vast supply chain are unlikely to receive a penny of the cash they are owed.

Administrators have already received claims for £22,091,980 from unsecured creditors but have warned the final total might be even higher.

The list of creditors owed money when Exeter-headquartered Midas Group hit the buffers has already surpassed 1,700 and includes small and medium-sized companies claiming anything from a few hundred pounds to six-figures sums.


Like this story? Why not sign up to get the latest South West business news straight to your inbox

Although Midas was mostly involved in construction schemes in the South West, the claims are from companies based around the country, including as far as Northern Ireland.

But a great many are in the West Country and they face the prospect of receiving no cash at all when administrators either dissolve or liquidate the Midas companies, as is expected.

Midas Group Ltd and its subsidiaries Midas Construction Ltd, Midas Retail Ltd, Mi-Space (º£½ÇÊÓÆµ) Ltd, Mi-Space Property Services Ltd, Midas Commercial Developments Ltd and Falmouth Developments Ltd all fell into administration in January 2022 blaming a toxic cocktail of Covid, inflation, money owed to them but not paid, and cash flow problems for causing a financial doomsday.

Administrators at global business advisory firm Teneo Financial Advisory Ltd have revealed Midas had net assets of £7,475,000 at the end of October 2021, including owning the freehold of two buildings, in Newton Abbot and Newport, worth £2,465,000 and £150,000.